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        <title>Mystery Novelists Hit Bako Tomorrow - Bakosphere - bakosphere&apos;s Blog - Bakersfield.com</title>
        <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/bakosphere/12547</link>
        <description>The Kern County Public Library wraps up its 2007 Adult Summer Reading Program, &amp;quot;Summer Sleuthing,&amp;quot; with a panel of three SoCal women mystery novelists who all set their books in the greater LA area.&amp;nbsp; You can check out their websites for more about their backgrounds, books, and samples of their writing: Denise Hamilton, Patricia Smiley, and Naomi Hirahara.&amp;nbsp; All three are members of Sisters in Crime LA.

An interview with Naomi Hirahara, a 2007 Edgar Award winner, was published in TBC&#039;s Eye Street yesterday, and you can find audio of the full interview on Bakersfield.com.&amp;nbsp; The interview, and her coming to read in Bakersfield, has gotten me all nostalgic, because, many moons ago, she took a chance on a teenaged wannabe writer and gave him a shot and an audience.&amp;nbsp; Naomi was the editor of the English-language section of the Rafu Shimpo, Los Angeles&#039; oldest Japanese American newspaper, and I was a high school student entering her youth short story contest.&amp;nbsp; She liked what she read, I guess, because she asked me to become a columnist.&amp;nbsp; Over the next two years, spanning the end of high school and the beginning of college, I wrote a column from the perspective of the biracial young adult that I was, a couple demographics that the paper, with its aging audience, desperately wanted to tap into.&amp;nbsp; I don&#039;t know if I helped at all on that count, but I do know that Naomi gave me valuable experience as a published writer that I couldn&#039;t have gotten elsewhere, back in the pre-blog/self-publishing era.

My daughter&#039;s naptime permitting, I can&#039;t wait to go hear her read.&amp;nbsp; The panel, by the way, is at Beale Memorial Library tomorrow, Saturday July 28, from 2 to 4 p.m.

--Jason Sperber</description>
        <itunes:summary>The Kern County Public Library wraps up its 2007 Adult Summer Reading Program, &amp;quot;Summer Sleuthing,&amp;quot; with a panel of three SoCal women mystery novelists who all set their books in the greater LA area.&amp;nbsp; You can check out their websites for more about their backgrounds, books, and samples of their writing: Denise Hamilton, Patricia Smiley, and Naomi Hirahara.&amp;nbsp; All three are members of Sisters in Crime LA.

An interview with Naomi Hirahara, a 2007 Edgar Award winner, was published in TBC&#039;s Eye Street yesterday, and you can find audio of the full interview on Bakersfield.com.&amp;nbsp; The interview, and her coming to read in Bakersfield, has gotten me all nostalgic, because, many moons ago, she took a chance on a teenaged wannabe writer and gave him a shot and an audience.&amp;nbsp; Naomi was the editor of the English-language section of the Rafu Shimpo, Los Angeles&#039; oldest Japanese American newspaper, and I was a high school student entering her youth short story contest.&amp;nbsp; She liked what she read, I guess, because she asked me to become a columnist.&amp;nbsp; Over the next two years, spanning the end of high school and the beginning of college, I wrote a column from the perspective of the biracial young adult that I was, a couple demographics that the paper, with its aging audience, desperately wanted to tap into.&amp;nbsp; I don&#039;t know if I helped at all on that count, but I do know that Naomi gave me valuable experience as a published writer that I couldn&#039;t have gotten elsewhere, back in the pre-blog/self-publishing era.

My daughter&#039;s naptime permitting, I can&#039;t wait to go hear her read.&amp;nbsp; The panel, by the way, is at Beale Memorial Library tomorrow, Saturday July 28, from 2 to 4 p.m.

--Jason Sperber</itunes:summary>
        <language>en-us</language>
        <pubDate>Fri, 27 Jul 2007 16:46:18 PDT</pubDate>
                
                    <item>
                <title>Jul 27,  2007 at 04:07 PM : Oh man, one more thing...</title>
                <description>Oh man, one more thing for me to try and do tomorrow! woo! - Nick, ABC 23</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/bakosphere/12547/#c_122184</link>
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                <itunes:summary>Oh man, one more thing for me to try and do tomorrow! woo! - Nick, ABC 23</itunes:summary>     
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>Jul 27,  2007 at 05:07 PM : sweet</title>
                <description>sweet</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/bakosphere/12547/#c_122189</link>
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                <itunes:summary>sweet</itunes:summary>     
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